Home→Forums→Relationships→resentment and fear towards parents
- This topic has 2 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 10 years, 3 months ago by heidi.
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July 15, 2014 at 7:39 pm #61009mernParticipant
I don’t feel that they are abusing me or anything. I just wish I knew where these emotions are stemming from. They go back as far as I can remember. Basically it’s a constant sense of extreme caution and defensiveness any time I so much as think of interacting with my parents, especially my mother. These are aggravated by all kinds of side emotions, topics, and situations, from anything to do with my boyfriend or my job to incredibly silly things like household chores. I have never managed to achieve a normal relationship with another person, because of this defensiveness and guarded attitude in regards to my parents. This trouble with friendships has been especially relevant throughout my childhood, combining the literal fear of having a friend come to my house and meet my mom and the sick discomfort of asking permission to go play somewhere else. This I remember clearly from 1st and 2nd grade. I’m now a senior, nearly 18, and promised to a beautiful young man who gives me hope for a happy home life together in the future, and I feel like I’m about to explode. My mom’s red personality and natural aggressiveness are getting in the way of me moving forward in life the way I want to. I’m still a minor, I’m aware I have very little power, but I’m fairly certain this suffocating terror of stepping out of line (most of the time I’m not even sure what the line is, just that there is one) is not normal. I don’t remember ever being disobedient, out of paralyzing fear of the consequences. I have never loved my mom. I have never promptly obeyed or come home before curfew out of love and respect, but out of resentment and fear. Much of the time I wish I had the courage to rebel so she would just kick me out already. I don’t even want to finish high school if it means living at home for another school year of hovering, monopolizing parents pretending to give me freedoms and privileges while holding things over my head and subtly keeping me tightly under their control.
I’m sorry if this is extremely long and doesn’t make much sense.
- This topic was modified 10 years, 3 months ago by mern.
July 16, 2014 at 5:14 am #61032Séamus MacDonaldParticipantI can certainly empathize with your situation. When I was a child, my father was domineering, violent and abusive. At times he would come home from the bar drunk and beat me for some perceived wrong I had done. The fear and resentment I felt toward him was very real and I carried it into adulthood with me. Today I am 41 years old and I only recently let go of that resentment.
The feelings you described are something you will struggle with until you find the courage to let them go. In the mean time, there are certain things you can do to make life under your parent’s roof a little more bearable. I would recommend at the very least talking to them one on one about your feelings. Rehearse what you will say over and over in your head and try to anticipate their responses before hand, so you know what to say when they dispute what you say. Be respectful and loving, but firm at the same time. A good opening statement might be something like: “Mom, you know that I love you and I am so grateful for all you have done for me throughout the years, but there is something I really need to say and I want you to understand I am saying this in love…” Then start going over how she makes you feel inside.
Chances are, you will not be completely successful at convincing your parents at first. Admitting to being wrong is very difficult and I’m sure your parents eel they are acting out of love, even if you don’t. But by talking to them, respectfully outlining your feelings, you are putting the idea in their minds that maybe they have some areas to work on. And even if changes are not immediate, what you said will stay in their minds and they will think about it.
If this does not work, you may need to consider avoidance as a viable option. I only recommend this as a last resort, but if life with your parents seems unbearable and nothing else works, try finding various other activities to fill your time. Get involve in a school group, a local volunteer program, or some type of out-of-school class. Look online for student activities in your area and give as much of your time to them as you feasibly can.
While your efforts will primarily be to make an unbearable situation at home more bearable, try to also see things through your parent’s eyes. Try to understand why they may be acting as they do. As an example, let me share some of my own experience with my father and how I learned to forgive him.
My father wasn’t always a drunk or abusive. I remember a time long before the abuse started when he was loving and caring. The drinking and abuse began around the time my younger brother was born. Knowing that my father suffered from severe insecurities and that he adopted me in order to prove to my mother that he loved her; that I was forbidden from even mentioning my biological father’s name in the house; that the abuse began as soon as my younger brother was born (my father’s real biological son); and that of the three children, I was the only one who was physically abused, all convinced me that somewhere in the back of my father’s mind, I was a constant reminder that my mother had previously been with another man and this was hard for him to deal with.
Whether or not this was actually the case was irrelevant because my analysis was not for my father, it was for me. I needed to have some reason why my father was so terrible toward me, so that I could cope. For me, this all made perfect sense and the more I thought about it, the less resentment I actually felt. Over the years, my resentment turned to sympathy and sadness and at one point I remember feeling a love for my father I had never felt before. Putting myself in his shoes helped me forgive him and today, my father and I have a good relationship.
A final word of encouragement:
Your situation may seem unbearable today, but like everything else, it will pass and when it does, it will seem but a moment in time. Try to consider it a test designed to strengthen you. Look for ways it might have shaped you and prepared you to handle a sometimes cruel and overbearing world.
July 17, 2014 at 11:37 am #61159heidiParticipantHello,
I hope this information isn’t too difficult to deal with. I am telling you this so (if you have any children) you can break the chain! Also so you decide to go no contact as soon as you legally can. I wish I had. I found out about my mean mother by searching mean mother. The resaults are a bit different now. If you goo gle (search) npd mother you will find a lot of info. But the world won’t be the same. you will see the world as meaner. You may realize that it is abuse. You may start to see that behaviour everywhere. So, search and reasearch, only if you are ready and truley want to know. It’s not easy. Some people are so abused they can’t love-even moms. I would not recomend thanking her for anything though. You did not ask to be born-that was HER choice. She’s probably toxic-get out and heal as soon as you legally can. Don’t feel too weird about finding out it’s really phychoogical abuse-we all are, to varying degrees. sorry-keyboard on android is terrible.
Learn to have boundaries, learn to love yourself and find inner peace. I wish you luck on your journey, I hope this info is coming to you at the right time! A year will go fast 😉 -
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